词条 | Sipopa Lutangu |
释义 |
| name = Sipopa | image =Royal Museum for Central Africa Hall Herbert Ward Sculpture The Chief Of The Tribe 1.jpg | image_size = 178px | caption=Sculpture of an African chief by Herbert Ward | predecessor= Mbololo | other_names =Lutangu | title = King of the Lozi people | successor = Mowa Mamili | spouse = Mamochisane | children = daughter and many sons | parents = Mubukwanu | relatives =Kandundu (sister) }}Sipopa Lutangu was the leader of the Lozi revolution and later a Litunga (king) of the Lozi people. He ruled 1864–1876.[1] BiographySipopa (also known as Lutangu) was a son of the former Lozi King, Mubukwanu, ruler of the south of Bulozi, based at Nalolo whose fight with his brother Silumelume, ruler of the north, for overall control of the Lozi kingdom after the death of their father, Mulambwa Santulu, led to the weakness that allowed the Makololo to subsume the Luyi kingdom easily. He was a successor of Mbololo, who was a very cruel king. Sipopa's reign became in 1864. Some Lozi contenders for power accused Sipopa of retaining the customs of the Makololo tribe (including the base of the language). He took Queen Mamochisane for a wife. She was a daughter of Sebetwane and sister of Sekeletu, who was a leper. Mamochisane was widely respected throughout Barotseland and Sipopa could well have simply been following a tradition that Sekeletu had followed whereby, when a chief had died, the wife or wives of the deceased were inherited and cared for by the new chief. His daughter married a surviving Makololo man by the name of Manengo. Sipopa had a sister called Kandundu and many sons:
His successor was Mowa Mamili. References1. ^{{cite book |title=Dictionary of African historical biography |chapter=Sipopa Lutangu |last=Lipschutz |first=Mark R. |author2=R. Kent Rasmussen |pages=218–219 |year=1989 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-06611-3 }} {{refbegin}}
3 : Litungas|Year of birth missing|Year of death missing |
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